• Narcissist Abuse,  Narcissist Abuse Recovery

    Recovering from Narcissistic Abuse: Blindsided

    We often hear the term “narcissist,” but what does it mean? Many individuals who are leaving and healing from relationships, especially romantic ones, with people who are narcissists. I was married to a narcissist and could not believe the things I was facing. It felt like an out of body experience.

    IDENTIFYING INDIVIDUALS WITH NARCISSISM

    So just what traits does someone with narcissism have, and what does that person look like in the early stages of dating? Studies suggest that 1% of the general population (2-16% of the psychiatric population) has a narcissistic personality, while an even greater number exhibit typical traits of narcissism (Brown, 2013). In addition, although 75% of people with narcissism are found to be male, women can also be narcissists.

    Narcissism is defined as an excessive sense of self-importance over and above the needs of others; grandiosity; arrogance; absence of the ability to empathize and experience reciprocity in relationships; the intense need for admiration/attention to fill very low self-esteem; impaired relationships resulting in parasitic/predatory behaviors designed to fill one’s self-esteem in the form of narcissistic supply (DSM-IV).

    CHARACTERISTICS OF THE RELATIONSHIP

    The literature on malignant narcissism is extensive, yet many are not informed about the dangers of being involved with someone whose character or actions tend toward narcissism. Those who were entangled in relationships with such individuals have more healing to do from breaks in these relationships than if they had been in relationships with healthy individuals because often these clients are manifesting symptoms of posttraumatic stress.

    Not only are they grieving the loss of the relationship, but they are also processing the unreality of a “fake relationship.” Furthermore, often psychological abuse (and sometimes physical and sexual abuse) has permeated the relationship. In order to heal, psychotherapy must focus on grief work and trauma recovery, in addition to understanding the elements of the toxic relationship, so that patterns are not repeated in the future.

    PROTECT YOURSELF

    So how does one avoid encountering someone with narcissism? I would suggest being particularly cautious with the pacing of dating. If you’re using a dating website, exercise extreme caution when meeting up with a dating partner for the first several dates until you feel you know the individual (i.e. meet in a public place).
    If the dating partner attempts to rush the relationship, that is a red flag. An individual who respects your boundaries will work with you to slowly progress the relationship at a pace that is mutually agreed upon. Just because initially there is a highly seductive “zing” quality to the attraction does not mean that the dating partner is healthy. To protect yourself from someone who may end up behaving out of narcissism, it is best to allow the connection to unfold slowly and observe to see if actions and words are matching up.

    Resources:

    1. Deliverance and Spiritual Warfare Manual: A Comprehensive Guide to Living Free by John Eckhardt
    2. Lisaescott.com: The Path Forward online forum and support network for survivors of narcissistic abuse
    3. Baggagereclaim.com: A website dedicated to individuals healing from relationships with emotionally-unavailable people (including narcissists)
    4. Outofthefog.com: A website with support and resources for people moving forward from abusive relationships
    5. Help! I am in Love with a Narcissist by Steven Carter and Julia Sokol
    6. Women Who Love Psychopaths: Inside the Relationships of Inevitable Harm with Psychopaths, Sociopaths, and Narcissists by Sandra L. Brown
    7. Without Conscience: The Disturbing World of Psychopaths Among Us by Robert D. Hare
    8. Emotional Vampires: Dealing With People Who Drain You Dry by Albert J. Bernstein, PhD
    9. Emotional Blackmail: When People in Your Life use Fear, Obligation, and Guilt to Manipulate You by Susan Forward
    10. Why is it Always About You? The Seven Deadly Sins of Narcissism by Sandy Hotchkiss, LCSW
    11. The Wizard of Oz and Other Narcissists: Coping with the One-Way Relationship in Work, Love, and Family by Eleanor Payson, MSW
    12. Narcissistic Lovers: How to Cope, Recover, and Move On by Cynthia Zayn and Kevin Dibble
    13. Splitting: Protecting Yourself While Divorcing Someone with Borderline or Narcissistic Personality Disorder by Bill Eddy, LCSW
    14. Stop Walking On Eggshells: Taking Your Life Back When Someone You Love Has Borderline Personality Disorder by Paul Mason, MS
    15. Malignant Self-Love: Narcissism Revisited by Sam Vaknin
  • Narcissist Abuse Recovery

    5 Things Children of Narcissists Wish Everyone Would Stop Saying

    1. All parents love their children.

    Because our core beliefs about family and society rest on ideals of unconditional parental love, in particular motherly love, acknowledging the truth that not all parents love their children or support their best interests is threatening to our fundamental sense of order and safety in the world. Yet it is this impulse to deny reality that enables abuse and further harms victims.

    2. Just tell your parents how you feel.

    Confiding our feelings with people we care about can be a powerful way to build understanding and intimacy, but it is not safe with a narcissistic parent. Because of their profound self-involvement, lack of empathy, exaggerated entitlement, and need to prop themselves up at others’ expense, narcissistic parents typically regard their children’s feelings as selfish, unreasonable, and threatening, even in infancy. Often such parents use their children’s feelings against them to manipulate, exploit, or humiliate them.

    3. Kids always blame their parents.

    The reality of human psychology is that kids deny flaws in their parents and blame themselves for their parents’ shortcomings in order to preserve whatever care giving they can get and optimize their chances of survival. The compulsion to deny and self-blame is in fact so great that survivors typically struggle long into adulthood to acknowledge their parents’ inability to love them, adding to their suffering and making recovery more difficult.

    4. But your parents are so great.

    Narcissists’ defense mechanism is built around presenting an idealized “perfect” public image to win favor and insulate them from potential criticism or rejection. It is common for outsiders, even therapists, to fail to recognize the angry, controlling, and deluded narcissistic personality below the surface of the appealing or ingratiating persona.

    5. Try to see it from your parents’ perspective.

    A defining feature of pathological narcissism and narcissistic personality disorder is ruthless self-interest and a refusal to validate the perspectives of others, particularly family members. For children of narcissists, every day is an exercise in seeing things from their parents’ perspective with little to no validation of their own needs or feelings.

    To help spare narcissistically abused children and the adults they grow into further trauma and isolation, we can begin by stepping back from our own facile assumptions and forms of denial to acknowledge the more complex realities that exist in families and relationships. When we have the courage to face unpleasant truths, we become more open, compassionate, and attuned to the experience and needs of those around us.

  • Design,  Narcissist Abuse,  Narcissist Abuse Recovery

    Narcissistic Family Enmeshment

    Enmeshment describes family relationships that lack boundaries such that roles and expectations are confused, parents are overly and inappropriately reliant on their children for support, and children are not allowed to become emotionally independent or separate from their parents. Family members are emotionally fused in an unhealthy way.

    Commons signs and symptoms of enmeshment

    If you grew up in an enmeshed family, these common signs of enmeshment will be familiar to you. You will likely have a history of narcissistic relationships – as you were groomed with a high tolerance for abuse. This behavior is subconsciously repeated until you awaken to the patterns and cut the narcissist(s) out of your life. No contact is the way to go to regain your strength and sense of self.

    • There is a lack of emotional and physical boundaries.
    • Your family places the picture-perfect image above your well-being.
    • You are always tasked to forgive and let go quickly.
    • Your family never apologizes or think they are wrong.
    • You enable others and make excuses for their behavior.
    • You try to avoid conflicts and don’t know how to say “no”.
    • You feel a constant sense of guilt and/or shame.
    • You are the family scapegoat for the family’s issues.
    • You don’t think about what’s best for you or what you want; it’s always about pleasing or taking care of others.
    • You feel responsible for other people’s happiness and well-being.
    • You’re guilted or shamed if you want less contact or you make a choice that’s good for you such as moving across the country for a great job opportunity.
    • Your parents’ self-worth seems to hinge on your success or accomplishments. They live vicariously through you.
    • Your parents want to know everything about your life.
    • Your parents’ lives center around yours.
    • Your parents don’t encourage you to follow your dreams and may impose their ideas on what you should be doing.
    • Family members overshare personal experiences and feelings in a way that creates unrealistic expectations, unhealthy dependence, and confusing roles. Often, enmeshed parents treat their children as friends, rely on them for emotional support, and share inappropriate personal information.
    • You feel like you have to meet your parents’ expectations, perhaps giving up your own goals because they don’t approve.
    • You don’t have a strong sense of who you are.
    • You absorb other people’s feelings and feel like you need to fix other people’s problems.

    What causes enmeshment?

    Enmeshment is a dysfunctional family dynamic that is passed through generational curses. We tend to recreate the family dynamics that we grew up with because they’re familiar. Enmeshment usually originates due to some sort of trauma or illness (addiction, mental illness, a seriously ill child who is overprotected). However, because it’s usually a generational pattern, you may not be able to pinpoint the origins of enmeshment in your family. It’s more important to identify ways that enmeshment is causing difficulties for you and work to change those dynamics in your relationships.

    Families need boundaries

    Boundaries establish appropriate roles – who is responsible for what in family dynamics. Boundaries create physical and emotional space between family members. Boundaries create safety in families. They reflect respect for everyone’s needs and feelings, they communicate clear expectations, and they establish what’s okay to do and what’s not.

    As a child grows up, boundaries should gradually shift to allow for more autonomy, greater privacy, developing his/her own beliefs and values, and so forth. In healthy families, children are encouraged to become emotionally independent – to separate, pursue their goals, and become themselves – not to become extensions of their parents (sharing their feelings, beliefs, values) or to take care of their parents.

    In enmeshed families, these kinds of healthy boundaries don’t exist. Parents overshare personal information. They don’t respect privacy. They rely on their child for emotional support or friendship. They don’t allow children to make their own decisions and mistakes. Children aren’t encouraged to explore their own identities, become emotionally mature, and separate from their parents.

    This burdens children with:

    • the responsibility of taking care of their parents (often when they aren’t emotionally mature enough to do so)
    • role confusion (children are expected to take care of their parents and/or are treated as friends or confidants)
    • prioritizing their parents’ needs above their own
    • a lack of respect for their feelings, needs, and individuality

    Children need to individuate from their parents

    To become a mature and emotionally healthy adult, you have to individuate and become independent from your parents. Individuation is the process of separating yourself physically, emotionally, intellectually, spiritually, and so forth. Individuation is the process of becoming an individual, not just an extension of your parents.

    The process of normal individuation is obvious in adolescents. This is the time when we typically start spending more time with friends. We experiment with our style and appearance. We recognize that we don’t have to believe the same things our parents believe. We gain clarity about our values, beliefs, and interests and can express them and act on them. We make more decisions for ourselves. In other words, we start to figure out who we are as unique individuals and look to the outside world for greater opportunities.

    In enmeshed families, individuation is limited. You’re likely to get stuck in an emotionally dependent, child-like state. This creates a strange juxtaposition of being undifferentiated and emotionally immature yet also parentified (treated like a friend or surrogate spouse).

    Enmeshment is confusing

    Enmeshment can be confused with healthy closeness, especially if it’s all you’ve known. Enmeshment creates an emotional bond, dependence, and intimate connection among family members. But it’s not a healthy dependence or connection. It’s based on using people to meet your emotional needs and not allowing them to become fully themselves. Adults shouldn’t use their children (or others) to make themselves feel valued and safe.

    The legacy of enmeshment

    In addition to the issues mentioned above, enmeshment can cause a variety of other problems such as these.

    • Approval-seeking and low self-worth
    • Fear of abandonment
    • Anxiety
    • Not developing a strong sense of self; not being in touch with your feelings, interests, beliefs, etc.
    • Not pursuing your goals
    • Being saddled with inappropriate guilt and responsibility
    • Having a hard time speaking up for yourself
    • Codependent relationships
    • Not learning to self-soothe, sit with difficult emotions, and calm yourself when you’re upset
    • Feeling responsible for people who’ve mistreated you or who refuse to take responsibility for themselves

    Ending enmeshment

    If you grew up in an enmeshed family, you’ve probably replicated enmeshment and codependency in your other relationships. However, this doesn’t mean you’re doomed to dysfunctional relationships forever. Below are four components of reversing enmeshment and becoming a healthier, more authentic YOU.

    1. Set boundaries.

    Learning to set boundaries is imperative if you’re going to change enmeshed relationships. Boundaries create a healthy separation between you and others. We need physical boundaries (such as personal space, privacy, and the right to refuse a hug or other physical touch) and emotional boundaries (such as the right to have our own feelings, to say “no”, to be treated with respect, or not answer a call from a toxic person).

    To get started, you’ll need to identify the specific boundaries that you need. Notice when you feel guilty, resentful, unappreciated, or angry. Explore what’s underneath these feelings – there’s a good chance there was a boundary violation. I will link a post to books that help break generational curses and help you to create boundaries with toxic people.

    2. Discover who you are.

    Enmeshment prevents us from developing a strong sense of self. As a result, you may not have a clear sense of who you are, what matters to you, what you want to do, and so forth. You may feel obligated to do what pleases other people and stifle your interests, goals, and dreams because others wouldn’t approve or understand.

    An important part of separating yourself from an enmeshed relationship is to discover who you really are. What are your interests, values, goals? What are your strengths? What do you feel passionate about? Where do you like to vacation? What are your religious or spiritual beliefs? If you weren’t encouraged to cultivate your own interests and beliefs, this can be an uncomfortable process. It can stir up feelings of guilt or betrayal. But despite what others have told you, it’s not selfish to put yourself first. It’s not wrong to have your own opinions and preferences – and to act on them.

    3. Stop feeling guilty.

    Narcissists know that empathetic and emotionally abused people often feel guilt for simply being born. This comes from a narcissistic caregiver. Guilt can be a huge barrier to setting boundaries, being assertive, developing a separate sense of self, and doing what’s right for you – not what’s right according to others. Guilt is often used as a manipulation tactic in enmeshed families. We are told that we’re wrong, selfish, or uncaring if we go against the grain. Over time, most of us internalize this guilt and come to believe that setting boundaries or having our own opinions is wrong. This kind of false belief is often so embedded that it’s the hardest aspect of enmeshment to overcome.

    The first step in changing it is to recognize that guilt and self-criticism are not helpful or accurate reflections of reality. Notice how often you feel guilty and how often guilt dictates your behavior. Then try to challenge the distorted thoughts that perpetuate feelings of guilt. Changing and rewiring your subconscious thoughts will be critical. This is where the false belief that “struggle love” and that love and abuse can coexist lie.

    4. Get support.

    Breaking free of enmeshment is tough because it’s probably a relationship pattern you’ve known since birth – and those that benefit from your enmeshment are certain to try to make it difficult for you to change. Getting help from a professional therapist or a support group is invaluable for learning new skills and reducing guilt and shame.

    Changing enmeshed family dynamics can be overwhelming. However, enmeshment exists on a continuum and so does the healing process. Ask God to help you on your journey. You will need the strength and He will place the people you need to successfully recover. You may have to go No Contact with your family. Psalms 27:10 states, “Though my father and mother forsake me, the LORD will receive me.” God will be on your side. The excuse “That’s your family” is no longer acceptable. It’s time to choose you. It will hurt. There will be highs and lows, but it certainly gets easier. It will be the most rewarding experience of your life!

  • Narcissist Abuse

    National Domestic Violence Hotline Focuses Week of Action on Survivors During COVID-19

    The COVID-19 pandemic has presented unique challenges for domestic violence survivors, including intensified insolation and additional barriers to accessing support and resources. This past week, June 1 – June 5, 2020, The National Domestic Violence Hotline (The Hotline) held its first Week of Action to increase awareness of these challenges, and to ensure that responses to domestic violence, from the local to the federal level, center on survivors.

    Amid the pandemic, The National Domestic Violence Hotline has worked diligently to continue operations and provide essential safety planning services for survivors, raise awareness of the increased risk to domestic violence survivors during this time, and enhance public education on their experiences.

    “While this is the first entirely-virtual Week of Action that we have hosted, we are grateful to the Congressional staff, supporters, activists and survivors nationwide who engaged with us to understand how COVID-19 is impacting survivors’ experiences,” said Katie Ray-Jones, CEO of The National Domestic Violence Hotline. “We put the survivor at the center of everything we do. We want them and everyone advocating for them to know how extremely strong and resourceful they are. Policies that are supposed to help them should always transfer power back to survivors, allowing them to reclaim agency and make decisions that are best for them.”

    On June 2, The Hotline CEO Katie Ray-Jones hosted a virtual conversation focused on the federal response to aid survivors during the pandemic. The Hotline received federal dollars through the CARES Act allowing to expand remote capacity in order to assist increased need and support specific resources for deaf and Native survivors. Ray-Jones was joined by Commissioner for the Administration of Children, Youth and Families Elizabeth Darling from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).

    “Survivors are facing even greater uncertainty and vulnerability. The Department of Health and Human Services is dedicated to ensuring access to lifesaving services and increasing public awareness about the unique challenges faced by survivors of domestic violence in this time,” said Commissioner Elizabeth Darling. “We are proud to partner with the National Domestic Violence Hotline to advocate for resources that support survivors and empower communities to effectively address domestic violence and intimate partner violence.”

    On June 3, The Hotline also organized a webinar COVID-19 and Beyond: Inter sectionality and the Future of Policy making and Advocacy” to raise awareness on how necessary it is to use a prism of inter sectionality in the policy making process to better address the needs of marginalized communities. The webinar featured community experts in conversation.

    Full recordings of these webinars will be published soon and are available upon request.

    “Survivors of violence from under served and marginalized communities have been left particularly vulnerable and the multiple barriers they face have gotten harder to surmount because of the pandemic,” said Ray-Jones. “Effective policy making and advocacy must seek to address and rectify harm brought onto marginalized communities, during the recovery from the pandemic and beyond.”

    This year’s Week of Action also coincided with the release of The Hotline’s annual Impact Report, detailing The Hotline’s work in 2019, including call, chat and text volume, most commonly used resources and referrals, and an overview of the circumstances facing those who contacted The Hotline. The full report can be read here.

    In addition to the two virtual events, The Hotline organized a Twitter storm to drive up awareness of domestic violence and the needs of survivors online and conducted online advocacy aimed at securing Senate passage of the HEROES Act.

    The HEROES Act, which passed the House of Representatives, and is now before the Senate, builds upon earlier emergency funding in the CARES Act and includes critical provisions in support of survivors of sexual and domestic violence as well as the programs that serve them.

    In the CARES Act, The Hotline received $2 million to ensure critical, ongoing services to survivors that reach out for support, resources, and safety planning during this time of heightened risk due to the COVID-19 health crisis.

  • Narcissist Abuse

    Detecting and Healing from Narcissistic Abuse

    The term “narcissist” is being thrown around a lot these days. But what does it actually mean? The standard Oxford definition is “a person who has an excessive interest in or admiration of themselves.” In a clinical context, narcissistic personality disorder or NPD is a rare mental condition marked by an exaggerated sense of self-importance, grandiosity, lack of empathy, and a pathological need for attention. This type of narcissism goes beyond a general self-centeredness and presents as a total disregard for others, or as disingenuous interactions and attainment to others only if it is perceived as relevant to the narcissist.

    I like to think of narcissism on a spectrum; we all have narcissistic qualities, it is when those tendencies impair our work, relationships, finances, and general functioning that there is cause for concern—namely, for the victims of the narcissist. Narcissists tend to leave a path of destruction, but are unaware that they have a problem, so they usually do not seek treatment. In a sense, narcissists are addicts; they are addicted to their supply (family members, romantic partners), to provide them with validation and emotional self-regulation as they are unable to regulate themselves. It is usually easier for the narcissist to blame and rage at those closest to them than to admit to or address underlying feelings of inadequacy, imperfection, and insecurity.

    Narcissistic abuse is one of the most insidious forms of domestic violence, as abusers are typically charming, attractive, and able to morph into whatever personality is needed for them to get what they want. If you are in a relationship with a narcissist, it is likely near impossible to describe to others what you are experiencing: the crazy-making, the gas lighting, the emotional and psychological manipulation, the questioning of reality, and sometimes even physical abuse.

    The Narcissistic Abuse Cycle

    The Narcissistic Cycle of Abuse is very similar to the standard Cycle of Abuse in most domestic violence situations, with a tension-building phase, an abusive incident, a honeymoon phase, and intermittent periods of calm. There are, however, some distinctions:

    1. A relationship with a narcissist often starts with the Idealization stage, or love-bombing. Expect to receive gifts, favors, “center-of-the-universe” attention, and proclamations of love and commitment (often very early in dating).

    2. At some point something will happen: the mask will slip for a second and you’ll see a different side of this person. You may catch them in a lie, notice incongruence between their words and actions, inconsistency in their availability, or you may see them acting differently around different people— like pretending to be nice to someone’s face then turning around and insulting them. In this Transition phase, you might call them out on their behavior or set a boundary to protect yourself. This will not be well-received.

    3. Instead of considering your feelings or concerns, the narcissist will then enter the Devaluing stage. Get ready for some serious pain here. A narcissist’s primary line of defense is flipping the script: blaming you for all the problems of the relationship, criticizing you and knocking down your self-worth, degrading or embarrassing you, and often using triangulation to make sure you feel crazy or replaceable (“None of my previous partners/friends’ wives care that they ‘harmlessly’ flirt with other people and stay out all night drinking.”). Regardless of whether their statements about others are true or not, the motivation behind them is to manipulate you and devalue your thoughts and feelings. Look for phrases like, “You’re being way too sensitive/crazy/controlling, etc.” This is where manipulation to get you to question your reality often sets in, a.k.a. gaslighting. For more on gaslighting, refer to my previous blog post.

    4. The relationship will often reach a breaking point, at which time another Transition stage will commence. During this time, you may either set terminal boundaries like leaving the relationship and going no-contact, or you may get sucked back into the madness by the narcissist’s skilled “hoovering.” This stage can be characterized by honeymooning behaviors like apologies, promises to change, and sometimes even steps toward change—like getting help for a drinking problem, or reading a self-help book you’ve asked them to consider in the past. It’s important to look for the motivation behind the behavior here: if the abuser is using “recovery” milestones and actions as a way to impress you and keep in touch with you, it is likely they are not truly in recovery. If they respect your space and take a significant amount of time to focus on growth, there is a chance true change may happen. However, because there is always someone willing to deal with the narcissist’s antics, most do not change. If you are lucky during this stage, the narcissist will discard you in favor of a new supply, and you will seek support and begin to unravel why you chose to be with a narcissist in the first place (see topics: trauma bonding, codependence, childhood abuse).

    Signs You are in a Relationship with a Narcissist

    Narcissists often do not see lying or manipulation as damaging behaviors. They may even convince themselves that they are doing what’s best for all involved—the grandiosity of playing God clouds the fact that being dishonest does not allow for others to make decisions that will align with their own rights to autonomy, well being, and sheer sanity. The lack of empathy particular to narcissists makes it very easy for them to continue living their lives with little regard for your discomfort. You will likely notice a general sense of uneasiness as the reality of the relationship makes itself known.

    Some signs that you are in a relationship with a narcissist are: 

    1. You walk on eggshells around your partner.

    2. You feel the need to voice/video record your conversations because your partner keeps discounting your reality.

    3. You’re hyper-vigilant for signs that a violent outburst might happen (i.e. trying to detect how much your partner has had to drink, avoiding him/her when drunk).

    4. Frequently wondering if your partner is telling the truth (actions don’t match words, evidence of lying)

    5. Being told you are crazy, having your pain minimized or dismissed

    6. Being name-called, yelled at, threatened, and told things like “You’ll never amount to anything.”

    7. Experiencing intimidation and fear (i.e. your partner throwing things, ripping up/destroying your possessions)

    8. Fearing for your safety but feeling too ashamed to share with others

    9. Feelings of isolation, especially when sharing your experiences with others and being met with blank stares or confusion

    10. Regularly being hurt physically, emotionally, psychologically even when you’ve asked for certain behaviors to stop

    11. Mysterious physical symptoms or autoimmune disorders flaring up, onset of panic attacks, anxiety, and depression, unexplained stomach aches

    12. Frequently feeling tricked, taken advantage of, resentful, and confused.

    Signs of Healing

    Recovery and healing look different for everyone. It may take several weeks of no-contact for you to start to feel relief. The level of communication with the narcissist and your ability to hold boundaries will impact your ability to move on with your life. Further, it’s important to look for other narcissists in your life, as there is/was likely one around before you met your narcissistic partner. Similar boundaries may apply to them. However, you will know you are healing when you start to feel safer and more at ease. Here are some signs that you may be healing from narcissistic abuse:

    1. You feel “lighter” literally and figuratively. For some this means their heart feels unburdened, and/or they may literally lose weight—usually a goal they were unable to achieve while in a relationship with the narcissist, sometimes due to high stress levels, emotional eating or other coping mechanisms. (Note: it is also common to lose weight after any break up due to the traumatic nature of loss. It is important to check in with yourself to assure that any weight loss is occurring at healthy levels.)

    2. You smile, genuinely, sometimes for no reason.

    3. You feel a sense of relief.

    4. Some chronic physical symptoms may begin to alleviate (joint pain, stomach aches, headaches, autoimmune disease flare-ups may reduce in frequency and severity)

    5. You are better able to concentrate and be present.

    6. Healthy habits you’ve forgotten about or put on hold come back or seem more appealing (mindfulness practices, exercise, the motivation to cook healthy meals, etc.)

    7. You feel more connected to your inner world, and less like you need to escape or distract yourself from problems.

    8. You do not spend your waking hours obsessing and worrying about your partner.